This compendium provides intellectual tools for those active in changing the world by making products and services more available to all who could benefit from them.
This issue of User Experience brings with it a set of transitions.
As last issue’s readers learned, former editor-in-chief Aaron Marcus has stepped down and we have flattened the UPA Publications hierarchy by not replacing him—in part, because he’s irreplaceable.
As director of publications, I have accepted the challenge to integrate our UPA Publications portfolio, including UX.…
Cartoons from the wild and twisted world of Leigh Rubin, syndicated cartoonist.
We are just beginning to regard the base of the pyramid as a viable business segment and understand the opportunities that come with designing for it.
This book was written for everyone, about everything, and it covers a wide range of topics but is skimpy on details and specific information.
Provide form instructions on a separate web page and place a “Help” link at the beginning to help users who prefer or require “up front” instructions to complete the form.
The latest iteration of a colorful web-based computer program illustrates the “thought process” of a computer faced with making a move in a chess game. The Thinking Machine 4 (http://www.turbulence.org/spotlight/thinking/method.html) lets you see how it analyzes each possible move before it decides how to respond to yours.
Using threads of green for your moves and orange…
Cartoons from the wild and twisted world of Leigh Rubin, syndicated cartoonist.
As we age, we are constantly compromising, and redefining what we view as living.
The role of seniors have important implications for the policies and focus of attention for our professional organizations and daily life.
